Schizophrenia
Forensic Psychology
Issues and debates
Forensic Psychology
Misc.
100

Characterised by acute, positive symptoms and is more likely to be cured

Type 1 Scz 

100

Pioneering forensic psychologist in UK 

David Canter 

100

Genes vs Environment 

Nature vs Nurture 

100

Working out the characteristics of an offender by examining the characteristics of the crime and the crime scene.

Offender profiling 

100

Attempts to generalise people vs uniqueness

Uses objective knowledge vs Subjective experiences 

Quantitative vs Qualitative  


Nomothetic vs Idiographic  

200

- the two main types of antipsychotics used to treat Scz symptoms. 


Typical & Atypical 

200

Investigative psychology, geographical profiling, Jeopardy surface

David Canter's contributions to Forensic Psychology 

200

Exaggerates gender differences / ignores or minimises gender differences 

Alpha bias / Beta bias 


200

Sutherland’s (1939) explanation offending behaviour 

Differential association theory 

200

Most of the criminals in these studies have been diagnosed with Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD). _______ has discovered that these individuals have reduced activity in the prefrontal cortex of the brain, the part of the brain that regulates emotional behavior.

Raine

300

Ahnedonia, speech poverty (Alogia), affective flattening, social withdrawal, catatonic behaviour etc. that are more likely to be chronic 

Type 2 symptoms (negative)

300

a data driven approach where statistics are used to produce predictions about likely characteristics of an offender.

Bottom-up approach
300

The focus on one specific culture, or the lack of consideration for others 

Ethnocentrism 

300

Predisposition to condition + environmental trigger 

Diathesis-stress model 

300

 found that adopted children who had a biological parent with a criminal record had a 50% greater risk of having a criminal record before the age of 18. Adopted children who did not have a biological parent with a criminal record only had a 5% risk

Crowe (1972) 

400

Classification systems used for Scz 

ICD-11 (International Classification of Diseases) -UK

DSM-V (Diagnostic and Statistic Manual 5) - USA 

400

Criminal geographic testing (aka jeopardy surface) and circle theory are both aspects of this Offender profiling technique 

Geographical profiling 

400

Psychodynamic vs Humanistic 

Determinism vs Free Will 

400

MAOA (lack of metabolism = increased dopamine) and CDH13 (decreased levels of serotonin = decreased ability to resist impulses) genes 

Genetic explanations for offending behaviours 

400

Arsenal 

Who are the leaders of the prem? 

500

Culture, Gender, Symptom overlap, comorbidity 

Factors affecting the reliability and validity of the  classification and diagnosis of scz 

500

The reliance on the detectives intuition; AKA crime scene analysis 

Top-down approach 

500

Participant harm, debriefing, right to withdraw, deception etc. 

Ethical issues 


500

longitudinal study on 1000 people. Assessed them at age 26 for anti-social behaviour and found that 12% with low MAOA genes were maltreated as children and were responsible for 44% of violent crimes.

Caspi et al (2002) 

500

1/4 pounder w/cheese meal 

lge coke no ice 

double cheese burger 

WOtD if necessary 



Mr. Webber's typical mcdonalds order

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